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A sentence (S) is composed of a noun phrase (NP) and a verb phrase (VP).

English Grammar. A sentence (S) is composed of a noun phrase (NP) and a verb phrase (VP). A noun phrase may be composed of a determiner (D/DET) and a noun (N). A noun phrase may also be composed of an adjective (ADJ) and a noun (N)

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A sentence (S) is composed of a noun phrase (NP) and a verb phrase (VP).

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  1. CMSC 330 English Grammar A sentence (S) is composed of a noun phrase (NP) and a verbphrase (VP). A noun phrase may be composed of a determiner (D/DET) and a noun (N). A noun phrase may also be composed of an adjective (ADJ) and a noun (N) A verb phrase may be composed of a verb (V) and a noun (N) or noun phrase (NP).

  2. Context-Free Grammars CMSC 330: Organization of Programming Languages

  3. CMSC 330 Program structure Syntax Source code form “What a program looks like” In general, syntax is described using grammars. Semantics Execution behavior “What a program does”

  4. CMSC 330 Motivation Programs are just strings of text But they’re strings that have a certain structure A C program is a list of declarations and definitions A function definition contains parameters and a body A function body is a sequence of statements A statement is either an expression, an if, a goto, etc. An expression may be assignment, addition, subtraction, etc We want to solve two problems We want to describe programming languages precisely We need to describe more than the regular languages Recall that regular expressions, DFAs, and NFAs are limited in their expressiveness

  5. CMSC 330 Context-Free Grammars (CFGs) A way of generating sets of strings or languages They subsume regular expressions (and DFAs and NFAs) There is a CFG that generates any regular language (But regular expressions are a better notation for languages which are regular.) They can be used to describe programming languages They (mostly) describe the parsing process

  6. CMSC 330 Simple Example S 0 | 1 | 0S | 1S |  This is the same as the regular expression (0|1)* But CFGs can do a lot more!

  7. CMSC 330 Formal Definition A context-free grammar G is a 4-tuple: Σ – a finite set of terminal or alphabet symbols Often written in lowercase V– a finite, nonempty set of nonterminal symbols Often written in uppercase Sometimes called variables No common elements; i.e., it must be that V ∩ Σ = ∅ P – a set of productions of the form V → (Σ|V)* Informally this means that the nonterminal can be replaced by the string of zero or more terminals or non-terminals to the right of the → S ∊V– the start symbol

  8. CMSC 330 Notational Shortcuts If S is not specified, assume the left-hand side of the first listed production is the start symbol Productions with the same left-hand sides are usually combined with | If a production has an empty right-hand side it means ε

  9. CMSC 330 Informal Definition of Acceptance A string is accepted by a CFG if there is some path that can be followed starting at the start symbol which generates the string Example: S 0 | 1 | 0S | 1S |  0101: S 0S 01S 010S 0101

  10. CMSC 330 Example: Arithmetic Expressions (Limited) E → a | b | c | E+E | E-E | E*E | (E) An expression E is either a letter a, b, or c Or an E followed by + followed by an E etc. This describes or generates a set of strings {a, b, c, a+b, a+a, a*c, a-(b*a), c*(b + a), …} Example strings not in the language d, c(a), a+, b**c, etc.

  11. CMSC 330 Formal Description of Example Formally, the grammar we just showed is Σ = { +, -, *, (, ), a, b, c } V = { E } P = { E → a, E → b, E → c, E → E-E, E → E+E, E → E*E, E → (E)} S = E

  12. CMSC 330 Uniqueness of Grammars Grammars are not unique. Different grammars can generate the same set of strings. The following grammar generates the same set of strings as the previous grammar: E → E+T | E-T | T T → T*P | P P → (E) | a | b | c

  13. CMSC 330 Another Example Grammar S → aS | T T → bT | U U → cU | ε What are some strings in the language?

  14. CMSC 330 Practice Try to make a grammar which accepts… 0*|1* anbn Remember, we couldn't do this with a regex! Give some example strings from this language: S 0 | 1S What language is it?

  15. CMSC 330 Backus-Naur Form Context-free grammar production rules are also called Backus-Naur Form or BNF A production like A → B c D is written in BNF as <A> ::= <B> c <D>(Non-terminals written with angle brackets and ::=is used instead of →) Often used to describe language syntax John Backus Chair of the Algol committee in the early 1960s Peter Naur Secretary of the committee, who used this notation to describe Algol in 1962

  16. CMSC 330 Chomsky Hierarchy • Categorization of various languages and grammars • Each is strictly more descriptive than the previous • First described by Noam Chomsky in 1956 • Type 0: Any formal grammar • Turing machines • Type-1: • Linear bounded automata • Type-2: • Pushdown automata • Type-3: Regular expressions • Finite state automata

  17. CMSC 330 Sentential Forms A sentential form is a string of terminals and nonterminals produced from the start symbol Inductively: The start symbol If αAδ is a sentential form for a grammar, where (α and δ∊(V|Σ)*), and A → γis a production, then αγδ is a sentential form for the grammar In this case, we say that αAδderives αγδin one step, which is written as αAδ ⇒ αγδ

  18. CMSC 330 Derivations ⇒ is used to indicate a derivation of one step ⇒+ is used to indicate a derivation of one or more steps ⇒* indicates a derivation of zero or more steps Example: S  0|1|0S|1S| 0101: S ⇒ 0S ⇒ 01S ⇒ 010S ⇒ 0101 S ⇒+ 0101 S ⇒* S

  19. CMSC 330 Language Generated by Grammar A slightly more formal definition… The language defined by a CFG is the set of all sentential forms made up of only terminals. Example: S  0|1|0S|1S| In language: Not in language: 01, 000, 11,  … 0S, a, 11S, …

  20. CMSC 330 Example S → aS | T T → bT | U U → cU | ε A derivation: S ⇒ aS ⇒ aT ⇒ aU ⇒ acU ⇒ ac Abbreviated as S ⇒+ ac So S, aS, aT, aU, acU, ac are all sentential forms for this grammar S ⇒ T ⇒ U ⇒ ε Is there any derivation S ⇒+ ccc ? S ⇒+ Sa ? S ⇒+ bab ? S ⇒+ bU ?

  21. CMSC 330 The Language Generated by a CFG The language generated by a grammar G is L(G) = { ω | ω∊Σ* and S ⇒+ω } (where S is the start symbol of the grammar and Σ is the alphabet for that grammar) I.e., all sentential forms with only terminals I.e., all strings over Σ that can be derived from the start symbol via one or more productions

  22. CMSC 330 Example (cont’d) S → aS | T T → bT | U U → cU | ε Generates what language? Do other grammars generate this language? S → ABC A → aA | ε B → bB | ε C → cC | ε So grammars are not unique

  23. CMSC 330 Parse Trees A parse tree shows how a string is produced by a grammar The root node is the start symbol Each interior node is a nonterminal Children of node are symbols on r.h.s of production applied to that nonterminal Leaves are all terminal symbols Reading the leaves left-to-right shows the string corresponding to the tree

  24. CMSC 330 Example S → aS | T T → bT | U U → cU | ε S ⇒ aS ⇒ aT ⇒ aU ⇒ acU ⇒ ac

  25. CMSC 330 Parse Trees for Expressions A parse tree shows the structure of an expression as it corresponds to a grammar E → a | b | c | d | E+E | E-E | E*E | (E) a a*c c*(b+d)

  26. CMSC 330 Practice E → a | b | c | d | E+E | E-E | E*E | (E) Make a parse tree for… a*b a+(b-c) d*(d+b)-a (a+b)*(c-d) a+(b-c)*d

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